Found Money: How To Generate Quick Cash In An Emergency

Found Money:
How To Generate Quick Cash
In An Emergency
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Table of Contents
4
Introduction
5
How to Cope with a Cash Crisis
5
Learning to Cope with a Money Emergency
7
Increase your Cash Flow without Going
Further into Debt
9
Start to Build your Emergency Fund
10
Say Good-bye to Credit Cards
11
Painless Ways to Find Money in an Emergency
13
Every Day Ways to Save Money in an
Emergency
17
More Creative Ways to Save Money
20
Thrifty Ways to Save Money
24
Even You can Save on a Shoestring
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Are You Ready to Start a Good Savings Plan?
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Smart Tips for Living on a Budget
30
Tips to Help you Save
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7 Serious Ways to Help you Save
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More Serious Savings Strategies
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Make Small Cuts for Huge Savings
37
Emergency Money Strategy while Dealing with
Debt, Financial Stress & Family
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Quick Cash Fixes
39
A Few Timely Lessons in Simple Living
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How to Save Money on Gas
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Simpler Solutions for Managing your Money
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Bring Both Calm AND Savings into your Life
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Slash your Electric Bill in 6 Easy Steps
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Good Ways to Find FREE Money
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Can you Survive/EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
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Introduction
At least once in every person’s life comes a time when the need is great and
the resources are few. It can be hard enough to make ends meet on a decent
wage, but, when the times get tough and the money just is not there to meet
the need, a person can easily despair.
101 Ways to Raise Emergency Money has been written with you in mind. If
you are forever trying to come up with inventive ways to earn and save more
then this creative ebook will absolutely thrill you.
When a person can have good financial control and a good plan of action.
Should emergency funds be needed, a person can then sleep better at night.
There is no real magic formula for coming up with on-the-spot emergency
cash. There is a good deal of thinking through and the putting of a good plan
into action. If you can do that, you have it made. That is truly all that any
one of us can do to secure out tomorrows.
How to Cope with a Cash Crisis
If you are hit with a serious money crisis and you find yourself scrambling
around for emergency money, here’s how to assess your situation and get
back on your feet.
All of a sudden and without warning, your roof begins to leak! Your hot water
heater shuts down and your computer goes up in smoke, the clutch needs to
be replaced in your car and your son decides to have his wedding on the Isle
of Oahu – all of this within the same week!
As you sit, stunned and you ponder an exit strategy you receive a friendly
letter from the IRS explaining that you miscalculated your taxes in 1996, and
they now own your house.
This Kind of Money Emergency Requires your Immediate Attention
What do you do?
The above scenario looks like a money emergency of biblical proportions. You
are afraid to open your front door for fear of finding a swarm of locusts!
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Thank goodness, there are things you can still do to restore your financial life
and equilibrium—and perhaps even fend off future misfortune—without
having to sell your very soul.
Learning to Cope with a Money Emergency
Wherever there are money woes, you can be sure to find crippling emotional
setback. Avoid it all you try, you might just as well begin to prepare for the
devastating fiscal and the emotional fallout that is sure to come. You will
need to cope very well with both if you hope to make a solid financial
comeback.
Whenever a money emergency hits, it will be your ability to deal with the
individual pitfalls that will hold you in good stead. It is when a series of
financial hits come your way that the stress will tend to accumulate and
make your life much more difficult to cope.
You will not be so overwhelmed when you can calmly and rationally look at
each individual problem as it arises. If you sit back wringing your hands with
worry and allow all of your emergencies to pile into one; you will find yourself
down for the count.
Calm must take center stage. You must NEVER allow yourself the luxury of
panic. There is no one there for you to just take over. You are all you have.
The more you panic, the less effective you will be. You need to keep a very
clear head to be able to sit down and come up with an appropriate plan. Be
aware of your own tendency to sabotage your plans further. It is only when
you are at your most calm that you will be prepared to get to where you
need to be and then overcome.
Being Calm is the First Key to Managing a Money Emergency
At even the first hint of a money emergency, it’s important not to act right
away. If you do you will inevitably make a mistake! First, before you can
manage your finances again, you have to first manage your emotions. You
absolutely must regain your balance before you can even begin to make a
plan.
If your money emergency demands that you act quickly, think first about
seeking the advice of a debt counselor, money coach or financial planner.
Whenever possible think about seeking out the aid of a financially perceptive
friend or family member who can help you to come to a clearer perspective.
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Remember the old adage that “two heads are always better than just one!”
You won’t need to make a major cash investment if you’re strapped. Look for
a planner who will give you a one-hour consultation for $150. Often times
this will be all you will need to securely turn the corner.
Time to Crunch some Numbers
The first step toward establishing financial stability is to step back, take a
deep breath and assess the damage. Possibly one of the bigger mistakes
people make when they’re in a financial crisis is not being prepared to make
a clear assessment of where they’re at.
You can easily become overwhelmed. However, totaling up the damage
serves two important purposes. First, you need to know exactly how much
you owe, how much money you have in hand and what it will take to cover
the distance between the two. Second, you will want to avoid any other
mishaps, such as penalties, further repairs, missed deadlines, etc.
If you are not properly prepared, you must become prepared on the spot.
Any type of money crisis will catch you unaware and you will feel cornered.
Wouldn’t it be ideal to be ready and waiting for the crisis? How likely is this
to happen to you, though?
Most people will be at least somewhat prepared. If the crisis is not too dire,
they will be able to handle it ok. Some will be sunk from the get go. The idea
is to not be overwhelmed and to have a good plan of action, no matter how
little or how a lot. You need to be entirely prepared to deal with any sized
setback.
Ideally, those unexpected expenses could be covered by the funds in the
Irregular Expenses account in any good budget. Unfortunately, though, there
is always a common problem. You might well have an emergency stash—but
it’s most often depleted. This same problem affects the majority of us so take
heart.
At about this time many people make the mistake of turning to plastic for
relief. Resist this one. You will only be transferring your problems from one
pocket to the other.
On the other hand, if you are sure you can handle using credit cards to deal
with a cash emergency, you had better be sure you could pay them off when
the time comes. Otherwise, why add yet another debt and another problem.
Eventually, it will all catch up with you.
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If you’re truly running while on your last leg, consider taking out a home
equity line of credit. This will work for some. The interest is tax deductible,
but those aren’t fixed rates. Be smart about this remedy, though. Unless you
plan to pay back the amount you borrowed promptly, it can end up costing
you more than you thought—especially if you’ve already depleted your own
equity.
The Idea is to Make a Smart Decision and not a Rash one
Think well before borrowing from your 401(k) or IRA. There are loopholes
that allow you to do so, but there are also hidden costs—never mind
potential taxes, penalties and other consequences. Keep in mind that if you
were to lose your job, you’d have to repay the loan immediately, or be taxed
as though it was a withdrawal. This remedy could be very costly in the long
run.
Increase your Cash Flow without Going Further into Debt
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Take on a hobby that you can translate into dollars. Can you walk a
neighborhood dog? Teach basket weaving? Host a dining room? Baby-sit for
your sister’s kids? Do Computer graphics? Consider which of your talents
might be worth a few extra bucks and then go out there and do it.
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Take on a part-time job. The holidays are soon coming up, and many
people supplement their salaries with part-time retail jobs. Just don’t spend it
all on holiday gifts and be sure to bank it into your savings.
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Spend more wisely. We all have our own ways of wasting money. Now
see how you can eliminate the ones that you wouldn’t miss. Just saving the
dollar you would normally spend on that cup of coffee each day adds up.
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Borrow from a trusted friend or relative. The interest rate is low to nil,
the cash is quick—but guilt is even higher. Be sure you have a plan for how
you’re going to pay back the loan even before you approach them.
Nowhere to go but up
You can spend your precious time crying in your milk wondering why you
have been singled out in this way or you can get busy and look at how this
could have happened to you in the first place. You will need to face some
touch answers if you want to avoid future financial crises.
Suffering a serious financial crisis is an excellent time to self-assess. Ask
yourself where you went wrong, where you’re not paying attention—and how
you might be setting yourself up for future financial setbacks. Understanding
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the answers to these important questions will help you out next time around
should the same befall you.
Be prepared before the crisis starts. You won’t be able to anticipate every
time a financial burden lands in your lap, but, if you want to be cushioned
against it, you have to anticipate the unanticipated.
Be very careful. An emergency fund is set up for . . . emergencies. It’s not
supposed to be depleted on a whim and every month. Take a closer look at
your expenses these last few months, and if you have had to lean heavily on
your emergency account to pad your budget, it’s time to rethink your money
management issues and in a hurry.
Pay special attention. Take a page out of this lady’s book…she noticed that
her towels were slightly singed when she took them out of the dryer one day.
Instead of calling the repair guy, she shrugged it off—until the next load
caused her entire house to go up in flames. We all have these same
moments where we glimpse a potential crisis hovering on the horizon and do
nothing until it is all too late. Pay attention to the smaller details and avoid
the larger calamities.
Plan further ahead. Your clutch is likely going to give out every 80,000 miles
or so. The roof can give out every 15 to 20 years. A vacuum cleaner might
give up the dust in as much as five. Avoid the obvious and pay excessively
later. It is your call.
Your five-year-old desktop is getting creaky. You could wait until it dies.
However, according to Murphy’s Law of Money, it will expire at the worst
possible moment. Either way, paying for a new computer might not be part
of the budget so planning ahead gives you some control over when you take
the hit. Start to plan today for what you know will be coming—come hell or
high water. Plan smartly for the inevitable.
Start to Build your Emergency Fund
Finding money during an emergency can be very difficult if you fail to plan.
Establish emergency savings in both good times and in bad. The chance is
very good that you will be called upon to put out a sum of money on the spot
and when you least expect it.
It is a very good rule of thumb to sock away three to six months’ living
expenses. You can also use this same money when you’re faced with major,
unplanned expenses such as a car that breaks down or much needed college
funds.
The purpose of this type of savings plan is to put the money away
consistently, and then tap into it for true emergencies. The success of this
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type of long-range savings plan will depend less on the rate of return than
on, day-by-day, putting the money away and then leaving it there for a true
emergency.
Lock it away and then hide the key.
People who are living on a fixed-income will have the toughest time setting
aside money for emergencies. If you can manage to just squeeze out another
$10 or $20 each month and sock it away into a money market account, it’s
worth doing.
If you decide you need $2,000 in an emergency fund, look at what you can
afford to sacrifice each month from your current budget and then look at that
sum of money as a bill to pay yourself. Decide on a monthly amount and
then put that same amount aside every month and then watch it grow.
Once you have reached your goal of $2,000 you’ll now be in the habit of
putting away that extra set amount each month. Keep on doing it.
Financial planners echo the idea of treating your emergency fund as a bill.
Put the money away each month, but don’t be tempted by the latest sale.
You are not to touch the amount, except for in an emergency.
Putting money aside on your own is hard. Retirement plans are successful
because the money comes out of your paycheck before you can get your
hands on it and because there are taxes and penalties for early withdrawals.
Stashing money away in an easy access money market account takes
discipline. Limit your access to the emergency fund. You can have immediate
access to some of the money, but not all of it. The bulk of the fund is to be
used, strictly, for emergencies and nothing else.
Once you have saved up about two months of living expenses, move one
month of expenses to a one-month CD. When the CD matures, roll the
principal and interest into another one-month CD. Your savings will grow well
this way.
As you continue making regular payments to the emergency fund money
market account, you will soon have another month of living expenses that
can be used to invest in a two-or three-month CD. If you are wishing to set
aside six months of expenses, continue the process until you can comfortably
purchase a six-month CD. Your savings will accumulate quickly this way.
Building your Emergency Fund
Before you start stashing away your money for an emergency, the first step
in building your emergency fund is to figure out just how much money you
have to put aside in the first place.
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People often don’t know where they’re spending their money. Once you can
account for every penny, it’s a lot easier to decide where you can cut back
and start to save.
You can’t always account for emergencies so it is more critical to build the
fund as fast as possible.
Say Good-bye to Credit Cards
One of the best ways to save money the fastest is to clip up all of those
expensive credit cards.
Credit cards are perhaps one of the most expensive forms of money. A very
good rule of thumb is, unless you pay off your credit card bills each month,
don’t use the cards for anything you can either eat or wear.
Another good rule of thumb is to consolidate your debt. If you have several
credit cards, each at different rates of interest, why not fold them into a
home equity loan and then write off the interest payments? This is a good
way to begin an emergency savings fund.
Here are some good suggestions for budget trimming that can work
for just about everyone:
When mortgage rates are especially low—consider refinancing your mortgage
and, while you’re at it, your car loans, too.
When you live in an area that has good public transportation, see if you can
get by on one car instead of two.
Make your current car last. With good maintenance, you will be able to
replace it every six to eight years instead of every three years.
Do a periodical energy check on the house. Replace all essentials such as
cracked storm windows and renew the weather stripping.
Cancel subscriptions to magazines or newspapers that you’re not reading.
Eat out less often and learn to be creative using leftovers. If you stop for a
morning cup of coffee at the local Deli, make coffee at home.
For the kids weekly allowance cut it back. Explain to them that every
member of the family needs to contribute to the emergency fund for it to
work.
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Remember, too, that you will be teaching your kids to be frugal and
to develop good spending habits.
Saving money on your own brings many rewards, and like most other things,
it becomes easier over time. In the end, your entire family will have peace of
mind that comes from knowing you have financial resources set up and ready
for when times are the toughest. The sacrifices you make now will be
realized when you need the most comfort as a family.
Painless Ways to Find Money for an Emergency
If your plan for money for your next emergency is to scoop up the change
that falls between the cushions, you might want to come up with a plan to
add to that stash. It is always a good idea to have a little extra green for the
lean times. Rainy days could be just around the corner. Rainy day funds
become necessary! Here are some very clever and virtually painless ways to
put aside some money now!
Put aside a large envelope, cookie tin, coffee jar or something similar. At the
end of every week, throw a couple of dollars aside. By the end of your first
month you should have some extra cash put aside to have a nice start on an
emergency fund. The idea to doing this is don’t count it or spend it. Place it
somewhere that is hidden away. Put it somewhere that you won’t be tempted
to dip into it. This kind of money really adds up!
The next time you treat yourself or your family to a meal out, tip yourself!
Just as you go to tip the waitress 15 to 20 percent, put the same amount
aside for yourself. When you get home, stash it away in your cookie jar.
Every time you go through a fast food window, put a dollar away for that
cookie jar, too!
The next time you get a good raise, instead of applying it to your cost of
living, bank it! This way you will always be living one raise behind and your
bank account will be growing by some 3 percent.
Take advantage of that cash back option! Next time you make a purchase
using your debit card, ask for a small amount of cash back. Instead of
spending it, stash it away in your cookie jar! Chances are you won’t even
miss that extra $1, $2 or $5 bill and come emergency time, you will notice
how the amount has piled up.
Next time you pay off that big-ticket item like a new car or tuition, continue
to make the payments to yourself! Set up a savings account and each month
slip the ghost payment into it. Watch as it builds nicely.
If you have noticed that you can get a better long distance telephone plan
and you want to switch, allocate the savings to your cookie jar. You won’t
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likely miss that little bit of extra money, and you will have a better telephone
plan, too.
Consider joining a Christmas club. You will save a lot of money. Each year
you put aside a bit of money and place it into a hamper program. Then, as
Christmas rolls around you don’t need to scramble looking for Christmas
cheer to share with your family. Your hamper arrives filled to the brim with
all kinds of seasonal goodies that you paid for over the previous year. You
can easily put aside $50 each year towards your emergency fund this way
and you and your family will enjoy a hassle free Christmas.
Sign up for a grocery shopping membership card. At the bottom of your store
receipt, you will see a print out that states how much you save each week. It
really adds up. You can easily save an average of $15 on each weekly
grocery trip. Add that amount, each week, to your savings cookie jar.
Did you enjoy your tax refund this year? Sure you did, we all did. That’s
because of the new tax laws. Many people will have a little extra money
coming their way after April 15. Decide to deposit that extra money right
away into your savings account or cash it and then stash it. Sure you can
come up with plenty of ways you can use that money now, but put it away
for later. You might need it even more later.
If you are a responsible spender, take out a credit card that rewards your
loyalty. When you pay off the bill every month, use a card that promises a
cash reward and bank the money. Use your reward credit card smartly and
you could end up with a very nice windfall for your rainy day fund.
Put aside a large mouthed jar in the kitchen. It is very likely that your
parents and grandparents had one. At the end of each workday simply empty
your pockets or clean out your change purse. All the change goes into the
jar. Who wants to carry around all that dead weight, anyway? Your spare
change adds up a lot faster than you think. While you are at it, add at least
one bill to your change jar at the end of each week. Aim for a $20!
Is it time to give up that nasty smoking habit? Imagine the money you will
save! If you are not quite ready to quit at least cut back by half. Put the
savings each day into your change jar and watch it overflow!
Convert to a coin-operated laundry. Keep a jar on your washer and dryer and
every time you go to do a load of laundry, slip in a coin or two. This adds up
month by month.
The next time you go to return a movie rental on time, pay yourself the late
fee. You will see how quickly that $1.50 to $4 can add up.
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If you yearn to loose some weight, try rewarding yourself the cost of the
item that you do without each day. Put that money into your change jar. You
will look great and you will be saving for a rainy day!
Place a large jar by the telephone. Everyone must drop in a coin to make a
call. All proceeds go to the emergency fund. This one works!
Emergencies always crop up. They are always guaranteed, unlike the money
to deal with them. Be prepared and plan!
Every Day Ways to Save Money for an Emergency
When you think about it, there are a good many ways to save those precious
pennies. Some ways will require some sacrifice, while others will require little
before thought.
The point is to be forever mindful of saving those extra pennies and before
you know it, you will have saved up a tidy sum.
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Spend less money than you earn each week.
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Seek out a higher paying job.
Keep your job skills sharp and up-to-date so that when a new opportunity
comes up, you will be on your toes and first in line.
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Adjust your lifestyle to always spend a bit less.
Create a firm financial budget to encourage saving.
If you must use credit cards/cut up those you can do without.
If you must use credit cards, pay them all down in full each month.
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If you have credit card debt at high rates, consolidate at once.
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Figure out a way to lower your student loan payments.
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Just say NO to spending money whenever possible.
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Lower your expenses, one by one.
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Stop purchasing items that you can do without.
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Refinance your mortgage or debt at a much lower rate.
Refinance your car loan at a much lower interest rate.
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Find cheaper insurance rates/then switch over.
Use coupons to shop with. Don’t purchase without a discount coupon.
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Wait for things to first go on sale before buying. Take advantage of
catalog saving certificates.
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Don’t buy an item just because it is on sale.
Buy generic or non-name brand merchandise as much as possible.
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Forego purchasing non-essential items.
Wait for prices to fall to a discounted rate before buying (applies
especially to electronics items).
Reward yourself for saving money. Enjoy as your debt shrinks and your
investments grow.
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Drive used cars or leases rather than brand new cars.
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Reduce your auto insurance.
Don’t eat out as much as you’d like to.
If you do eat out, buy gift certificates for half price meals.
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Buy only discount magazines.
Do more stay in activities at home.
Invest the money you save to earn even more.
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Create a plan to save $200 each month (as much as you can manage.)
Never miss the monthly savings payment to yourself and try to find ways
to increase it.
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Don’t spend money just because you have it.
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Look into getting a better quality education.
Stay very busy – you will have less time to spend money.
Find an interesting hobby to occupy your time and stop you from
spending money.
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Find a hobby that you can turn into earnings.
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Stop smoking and bank the savings.
Go on a sensible diet and lose weight. You will save money on food, look
and feel better, and your long-term healthcare costs should fall
dramatically.
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Look carefully at how you spend and save your money.
Learn how to manage your finances by reading financial publications.
Increase the amount of money you earn through a second job, promotion,
new job, investments, etc.
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Don’t try to compete with your friends and neighbors. Be satisfied with
what you have.
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Don’t compare yourself to your friends and neighbors. Be happy being
you.
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Sell your car and take the bus to work if you can.
Contribute the maximum each year to your 401K or to an IRA.
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Buy Dental Insurance before you need it.
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Buy Health Insurance before you need it.
Paying down your debt is also a way to save money (it saves you from a
debt payment and brings you closer to having money to invest).
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Switch to lower your telephone bill.
Lower your cable bill by deleting pay channels or switch to satellite.
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Earn extra money by completing short surveys online.
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Practice restraint at all times.
Be patient when bargain shopping.
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Start saving money today!
Don’t give up -- put just $10 aside, today!
More Creative Ways to Save Money
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Shop for clothing at thrift shops (especially for young kids). Look for
gently worn or even new clothes for 1/10 the price of new (or less).
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Pay your bills online. It’s protected and you can save with stamps.
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Put your kids on the school bus rather than driving them to school.
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Slipcover or reupholster older furniture for a quick update rather than
buying expensive new furniture.
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Refinish furniture and/or decorate with new paint. Use older and broken
furniture to make a unique piece.
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Take your lunch to work every day! Make your meals in bulk and then
freeze them in smaller containers to save even more money.
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Buy a bread maker to make your own bread. This is much cheaper than
$2.00 a loaf, and tastes terrific!
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Shop for dented canned goods and outdated toiletries at salvage grocery
stores.
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Read magazine subscriptions at the library or buy them at the thrift shop
for .25 to .50 after someone else has read them.
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Stop drinking expensive sodas and make Kool-Aid or decaffeinated iced
tea, instead.
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Cancel expensive telephone options like call waiting.
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Check out library books instead of buying expensive new titles.
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When you wash your hair every day don’t lather twice. Saves shampoo!
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Change your eating habits and avoid expensive, processed foods.
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Exercise and eat right to keep your doctor bills down.
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Brush and floss your teeth to keep the dentist bill down.
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Keep up on regular auto maintenance and avoid costly repair.
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Mend your clothing instead of buying new clothes.
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Buy only clothing that does not require dry cleaning.
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Take care of your own nails. Avoid manicures.
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Simplify your hairstyle – wear a hairdo that doesn’t require much
maintenance.
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Get at least 3-6 quotes when shopping for items over $100.
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Develop self-control and simplify your life if possible.
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Buy only inexpensive, no-name drugstore cosmetics.
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Cut your dryer sheets in half.
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Buy generic over the counter medicine rather than name brand items
when possible.
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Buy generic baby wipes, diapers, and formula, anything you can for the
baby.
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Look for quality, name brand clothing at garage sales in more affluent
neighborhoods.
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Find fashionable clothing in the sale departments of stores like the Gap
and Stitches.
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Keep in fashion by finding basic colored tees and skirts and then add
cheaper, trendy accessories.
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Buy baby clothes privately from someone that has an older child (one
year older) than yours. You can find good quality clothing cheaper this
way.
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When you get change back from a purchase put it in the piggy bank.
Always give the cashier whole dollars, not the exact amount. In a few
months, you will have “found” money that can be used for an emergency
fund.
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You can save money by shopping for groceries in the “bulk foods” aisles in
your grocery store.
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Bulk up in the wintertime. You don’t need the heat above 68 degrees in
the winter inside your house. Wear warm clothes and socks/slippers while
in the house.
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Use all plastic bags you receive at the grocery store for trash bags.
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Some grocery stores give you a 5-cent credit per bag if you bring your
own bags. Pennies add up over time.
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Instead of buying a new house, rent to own. The payments are cheaper.
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Install a water softener. It might be expensive to start up, but in the long
run, you use less shampoo/conditioner on your hair and it saves your
appliances (pipes, iron, washing machine, dish washer, kettle and hot
water tank) from clogging up with lime scale.
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Breastfeed your children!
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Save money when shopping next time at the supermarket by
remembering to check the lower items nearer to floor level as they are
often much cheaper than those at eye level. Also, resist the temptation to
purchase extra items at the checkout such as magazines and candy bars.
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When you receive a gift that you are sure you won’t use, re-gift! The next
time you will need to buy a gift – give away one of your own.
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Buy, slaughter and butcher your own cow. The average cost of the meat
is $1.00 per pound.
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Hand-pick your own fruits and vegetables in season. They are less
expensive and better quality foods.
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The next time you yearn to see a movie wait to see it on DVD at the video
store.
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Quick braking, cornering, and accelerating (speeding) will eat your gas up
considerably. Never let your fuel needle go below a ½ tank, or fill it up
when you drive it to “Empty”. Nickel and diming your gas tank gets you
no where fast!
Thrifty Ways to Save Money
Saving for an emergency need not be a chore when you are making a good
effort to put money aside constantly. Be in a mood of saving and watch as
that bank account accumulates.
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Instead of buying a new DVD, save money by trading with family and
friends. Once a month do the rounds and before you know it, you will
have a new library of good movies to enjoy.
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Plant a small garden each spring, with just the vegetables that you really
like. Even a small effort every day can save you dollars usually spent on
fresh vegetables at the produce market.
•
Buy your bread and other bakery items at the local thrift bread store.
•
Check your local library for the newest DVD/video releases and then rent
three for $2.00 for two days.
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•
Read your local newspapers online.
•
Search eBay for big ticket items and then save literally hundreds on
computers, DVD players, etc.
•
Keep track of the cost of items you buy a lot and get them at the
cheapest store, like cleaning supplies at Family Dollar, pet food at WalMart, etc.
•
Make a conscious effort to combine tasks that require driving some place,
so you will get the most out of your mileage.
•
For your friends and family who do not feel slighted by this, send e-mail
cards for holidays, birthdays and as thank you cards. In addition, e-mail
family and friends who live far away, instead of calling long distance.
•
Get rid of your monthly fee long distance service, and just use an access
code when you do call, which is infrequently anyway and inexpensive.
•
Decide which satellite channels you could do without, and give up a few
shows you really like. You can save more than $20.00 on your monthly
bill.
•
When you buy vegetables, fruits and bread at the grocery store check the
reduced-for-quick-sale carts and shelves first.
•
Change the oil in your vehicles yourself.
•
Save money when buying clothes for the following year at the end of the
season / during the off season. You can get great mark down prices.
•
Each evening take the spare change from your pockets or periodically
clean out your purse and toss the coins aside. Never take any money
back until the end of the year. Then take all of the coins to the bank and
exchange them for cash. You’ll be surprised to find out they’ve added up
to $50, $100 or even $200.
•
“Take care of your cents, and then your dollars will take care of
themselves.”
•
Bike to work in good weather instead of driving to save on gas.
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•
Eat a few hearty vegetarian meals each week.
•
Shop garage sales for a great source of household items, books, clothing,
and furniture.
•
Don’t buy bottled water! Buy a good water-filter and drink tap water.
•
By the end of each day put all of your change into an empty coffee can.
Then roll coins as you watch TV or listen to the radio. This will add up to
hundreds of dollars very quickly and gives you something good to do with
your hands to relax.
Save money by reducing your energy costs. Energy can be the number two
or three expense, along with the cost of rent or mortgage and food.
Switch every single bulb to compact florescent bulbs. They may be expensive
but they last for years (no more replacements) and tend to use about 1020% of the energy of regular bulbs. Buy one each time you make a shopping
trip, starting in the high traffic areas of the house like the kitchen or stairway
until you no longer have any incandescent bulbs left.
If you own your home, seriously consider switching any electric heating
appliances to natural gas such as the hot water heater, furnace, stove or
dryer. Electricity can be used for almost any device, and you pay a hefty
premium on electricity for that. Gas is very efficient for heating devices; it
heats up much quicker and wastes far less energy.
Do all of your laundry in cold water. Most modern detergents are just as
effective in cold water as in hot water. Also, make sure any laundry that you
do is a complete and full load - it takes the same amount of energy as a
tenth of a load.
Try this trick with your dryer: Put it on for 20 minutes, and then put it on “air
fluff” for 15 minutes. Your clothes are already hot with the water coming off
as vapor and you’ll find although it takes about 20% longer, you save about
50% of the energy costs of your dryer.
In the colder months when you need to use your furnace, turn the heat on to
your desired temperature. When the furnace turns off (your house has been
heated to temperature), turn the thermostat to the off position. If you feel
cold, check the thermostat. If you 5 degrees below your desired
temperature, turn the thermostat on again to your desired temperature.
Often furnaces will kick in and out to maintain your desired temperature, but
furnaces are far more efficient when they are in the heat cycle for longer
periods. You’ll save about 50% on your furnace costs, even 30% over having
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a high-tech digital thermostat. Of course keep it completely off when you’re
out of the house.
If you ever leave the house for the weekend or longer, unplug everything.
That alarm clock or VCR blinking or DVD on standby still take power. If
you’re leaving the house for a week, you will save real money by just
unplugging all of these devices- and you’ll protect your home from fire risks
should there be a malfunction or power surge.
Keep your fridge and freezer as full as possible. The fewer airspaces in your
fridge, the less time it takes for your fridge or freezer to cool the air. Don’t
have much money for food? Just buy a bunch of bread and throw it in the
freezer, you usually can get bread cheaper when you buy it in large
quantities anyway.
If you really need a magazine subscription make up a small group maybe
with three people to divide the costs. Then each person can keep the
magazine for one week.
Save money by throwing away any catalogs or magazines which tempt you
to buy something.
Cereal can be frozen and it keeps for a very long time. Before that, we could
never eat it fast enough and had to throw it away when it was stale. When
you pour milk on it, you would never know that it had been frozen. I have
not yet found a cereal that tasted bad from the freezer.
Don’t throw away your empty bags of milk. Instead cut them open and wash
them. You can use them as baggies. They also keep frozen foods fresh when
used with a sealer.
Save money by preparing your grocery list by planning menus for the coming
week and buy only what is on your list.
Borrow DVDs from friends and family instead of renting.
Set your washer to the shortest wash setting possible. Instead of washing
your clothes for 10 minutes put it on for 5 minutes. It saves on your electric
bill and on your clothes wear and tear.
Pick up the pennies, dimes and nickels found on the sidewalks or in parking
lots. Add it to the jar of loose change you are saving and by the end of the
year you can add this money to your emergency fund.
Foster the practice of team sports in your kids. The more time you spend
with your kids playing sports, the less time and money they will spend at the
shopping mall.
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To save money on gas, don’t fill the gas tank to the brim since the extra
weight of the gasoline takes extra toll on engine power. Take out all items in
the trunk which are not important to reduce vehicle weight.
Watch other peoples’ budget-conscious movies. Buy your own jar of popcorn
and add your own seasonings.
Turn off the heat at night and sleep with a hot water bottle. This works fine
in a small apartment, because it heats up quickly. For people with larger
houses, turning the heat down should work well, too.
If you must drink a specialty coffee, Espresso seems like a luxury item, but
because it’s ground finer, and you use less, the coffee lasts longer.
Shop eBay for things like razors, lotions, computer software, baby formula,
diapers, etc. If you can plan ahead, you will save.
Each pay period set aside any amount that you have budgeted for but did not
need to spend. For instance, you may have anticipated that $50 would be
needed to maintain your car, but only had to spend $30. Take the “extra”
$20 and put it into your savings account.
Even YOU can save while on a shoestring
Believe it or not, how much you save has little to do with how much you
make and studies have proven this! It is time to put away the excuses;
here’s a roadmap for finding money you didn’t even know you had.
That One Simple Word—Savings
When you hear that one, simple word, do you feel a deep sense of guilt? Of
course you do – we all do. That is because, like most Americans, 75% of
respondents said they knew that their savings, targeted for retirement, were
insufficient.
That’s cause for distress, perhaps, but not nearly as remarkable as the
discovery that how much you save now has very little to do with how rich
you are, today. This is so true in fact, that the middle-income earners
managed to save less than the lower-income earners in that same study.
Now this is remarkable when you think about it. Those with less saved more!
What is the secret to their savings success?
For those of us who scrimp and save endlessly and with so little to show for
it, these statistics are both annoying and embarrassing! It also means you
have no excuse for inadequate savings.
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The bottom line here is this: You just have to save, regardless! That means
for every $10 you earn, you MUST sock away at least $1 in savings. Does not
sound to be too difficult, right? WRONG!
UNLESS you have an iron clad savings plan, you will not save a single red
cent! The trick is in the purpose and the plan!
WHAT IS YOUR EMERGENCY PLAN?
ARE YOU READY TO START A GOOD SAVINGS PLAN?
You are ready but you feel at a loss as to how you will come up with that
extra money. You are already barely eking out a living. You can manage if
you train yourself to think differently. That is the first part of any good plan.
You have to think right. If you don’t think right towards your money, you
won’t be able to manage it.
Your First Step: Rethink how you think about money
Saving money is a calm state of mind. Before you can even begin, you have
to say NO to all of the spending—and stop thinking that you actually need all
the stuff you’re spending all of your hard-earned money on. Just don’t spend.
That is simple enough! Say NO to all of the excuses and reasons for why you
feel you MUST spend. Tell yourself, NO MORE EXCUSES, PERIOD! The very
next time you want to buy something, take the $50 or $100 out of your
wallet, instead and stash it away somewhere. Do you see the logic? That’s
why you call saving. You don’t end up with stuff; you end up with the hardearned MONEY.
Another new way of thinking will be to think of frugality as your savior.
Become a confirmed cheapskate and do as your most frugal friends do. Pay
special note to the fact that frugal friends fix the shower curtain instead of
buying a new one. Sit down with Depression-era relatives and ask about how
they made ends meet despite even desperate times. You want to learn to
economize.
The next step in rethinking is to become inspired. Spend all of your spare
time online and search out those frugal Web sites. Look at “living cheaply,”
“frugal living” and “voluntary simplicity.” You’ll find a ton of good Web sites
devoted to living on less, such as: thefrugalshopper.com, simpleliving.net
and frugaliving.com.
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Learn to turn shopping time into activity time. Go for a bike ride, walk down
memory lane, take the kids to the park; do anything and everything that you
can to take your mind off shopping and spending. It works!
Step # 2: Time to Save!
There are any number of creative ways to live on less. However, you don’t
want to make your life miserable. Here are some great ways to economize
without missing quality of life.
Don’t think too much about it – just do it! Direct deposit is now your best
friend! Your money is whisked away into your IRA, 401(k) or money market
account—and you don’t have to do a thing to make it happen. Just drop by
your payroll department and/or your bank and fill out the forms. Do it today.
Eat meatless some of the time. Go veggie. Prepare just three meatless days
a week (without substituting pricey fish) and you could save $25 a week,
which equals $100 a month, which equals $1,200 a year! Beans: You will
learn to love them.
Play the money game. Whenever you get a $5 bill, put it aside for later.
Alternatively, do the same with ones, with quarters or even all your spare
change. You’ll have a nest egg built up before you even miss a nickel.
Never spend the extras. Save all of your income-tax refund, your holiday
money from the folks, the $20.38 overpayment check from the telephone
company and any other extras and save every penny.
Negotiate and Haggle. You will be impressed by who will drop their prices,
fees and interest rates: airlines, hotels, credit card companies, and even
computer/appliance/rug salespeople. Before you even think about paying full
price: Haggle a bit first.
Re-evaluate your money before you spend. That dinner out for the family will
cost more than you spend on groceries in a week. That fancy pair of shoes is
worth half the cost of a commuter pass. Learn what your money is worth to
you, and you won’t be so quick to dispose of it.
Don’t overpay on your taxes. Yes, you love to get a big refund from the IRS
every spring. The fact is, though, you’re effectively lending money to the
government and interest-free. Go through your tax return and see if you can
hold out until Dec. 31 to maybe get a $150 refund. That way you can use
your money NOW should you need it for an emergency and bank the refund
when you get it later.
Decide to raise your insurance deductibles. Reassess each of the deductibles
for your various kinds of insurance. If you can raise them at all, your
premiums will drop.
25
Bring your mortgage costs down. Look at whether or not the rate is too high.
If it is, look to refinancing – this will save you money. Now, let’s look at the
private mortgage insurance (PMI) you’ve been paying because you didn’t
have enough money to make a 20% down payment. If the equity in your
home is greater than 22%, make sure that it is cancelled. It’s the law.
Finally, pay up on your mortgage. If you can manage an extra $100 per
month, you will save thousands in interest costs over the long haul.
Toss out those nasty, glossy catalogs. The best-known form of spending
temptation known to man or woman is the catalogs. Sure they are fun and
look good, but are they worth the risk of spending? Chuck them straight out
into the trash.
Refuse those unnecessary fees. Like the $2.50 you pay just because the ATM
is right there, right now as opposed to walking two blocks to your bank,
where you don’t get charged at all every time you use your cash card.
Alternatively, how about the late fees for returning videos? These really add
up. Don’t forget those fat charges banks hit you with when you write a check
that, well, bounces.
Clean it yourself. I’ve discovered a very cool trick: When a clothing label
says, “Dry Clean Only,” I wash it. On the other hand, dab out that little
mustard stain with an old-fashioned cleaning device cleverly known as a
sponge.
Don’t pay for a pro. If you can fix the neighbor’s garage door and she can
paint the kitchen: go for it and save.
Put your raise in the bank. Put that tiny 3% to 5% boost in the paycheck on
your direct deposit and live on your previous salary.
Pay smart for long-distance. Evaluate all of the different telephone plans for
value. Pay attention to what you are currently paying per minute. Some dialaround codes or cheap calling cards (one without a surcharge per call) may
give you a better rate. Not only will you save, but also you may find you
won’t need to speak to Alvin in Schenectady so often.
Just buy the basics for the pets. Say no to pet pampering. Does your dog
need those t-bone snacks? Does your cat need that rabbit-fur-lined toy?
Probably not.
Vow never again to pay full price. The next time you must shop, hop onto the
World Wide Web. Look for eBay, half.com and craigslist.org for excellent
sources of “lightly used” goods—everything from books to jewelry to office
furniture—even the entire first season of Star Trek on video.
When you are focused on being savings minded, you’re thinking about
money changes. Before you know it, you have substantial savings.
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Smart Tips for Living on a Budget
Regardless of the time in history and no matter what the current state of the
economy, no matter what the current trends are, no matter what the
unemployment rate is or where interest rates are, some money-saving ideas
always work and stay true.
Big changes come from small steps and if you determine to put even one of
these many savings secrets into place, you will see big change in your life.
You will now learn a variety of savings tips. You will learn how to best place
your hard-earned money in a variety of down-to-earth ways. What you will
learn about will set you up nicely in your day to day life.
Money Saving Tip #1:
The great Albert Einstein once said, “It takes a genius to see the obvious.”
Let these wise words guide you today. What he meant by that is that
sometimes the simpler things in life are the most powerful ... but because
they are so obvious, we tend to ignore them, and not let them work for us.
One of the most powerful money making ideas is this: keep a daily diary of
everything you spend. Go to the dollar store, buy a little book, and carry it
with you wherever you go. Write down every penny – each single penny you spend. It’s just as simple as that.
If you do this one thing, you will find that something magical happens in your
financial life in only a few weeks.
There is something incredibly powerful about writing down each of your
expenditures. It makes the flow of money through your life more realistic and
exacting. It shows you simply and clearly just exactly where you are
spending your money, on what and why. Once you know this, it becomes
much easier to control your spending. You will feel empowered with selfcontrol and this will encourage saving.
Many people who have taken up this practice have not only learned
something about themselves, which they never before understood, but they
are often astounded by the simplicity of the lesson learned.
For example, a person could realize through examining their notebook that
they actually spent nearly $1,000 throughout the year on diet soft drinks,
snacks and candy bars! Since their job only brings in $20,000 per year, they
realized that 5% of their entire income was being frittered away on
something entirely frivolous. The person gave up the snacks and drinks, and
27
found they had enough money to go on vacation the following year. If you
had the choice between snacks and a much-needed vacation, which would
you choose? Of course you would choose the vacation, we all would.
The point is, it was their daily expense log that helped achieve the insight
and clarity they needed to realize control of their finances. That’s what a
simple spending record will do for you - it will give you much needed control
over your spending, and thus your financial life. There may be nothing but a
75-cent notebook and a ballpoint pen between your life of financial struggle
and financial freedom.
Money Saving Tip #2:
Stop deficit spending! We all know how Uncle Sam has been creating debt—
spending more money than our country takes in. It’s called deficit spending.
Well, don’t do the same! The same rules apply to you and me. Using those
nasty little plastic cards may be the “American Way,” but it’s a debt making
way and creates plenty of fools each new day.
Today, the average credit card holder is carrying around $8,000 in plastic
debt!
Spending yourself into such debt with a credit card is certainly very easy, as
many of you already know. The reason is psychological. When you give that
clerk a credit card, it’s just not the same as handing over a stack of green
dollar bills. Would you as readily hand over a pocketful of ten-dollar bills as
toss a credit card across a counter? Probably not. This one is a no-brainer for
most!
Credit cards put you in debt and keep you there. Even for people with good
incomes, paying your credit card debt down to zero can be amazingly
difficult. In addition, make no bones about it; credit card debt will sap your
financial strength just as readily as an open vein will deplete your physical
body of its very life force. Using a credit card by choice can quickly turn to
using it for need. Once you get to that point, you are already in trouble and it
becomes time to get some help.
There is no secret in freeing yourself from the credit card game. You must
take out a pair of scissors today, cut your cards in half, and begin paying
them back, slowly but surely. Be sure to always pay more than the minimum
amount due, even if it is only $10 more.
Once you stop adding to the debt, even small payments will eventually, add
up. You can get out of debt, if you are patient and self-disciplined. Once your
cards are history, you must adopt a strict pay-as-you go policy. Instead of
buying now and paying later, save now and buy when you have the full
amount. This is key to being able to save.
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Once again, stopping credit-oriented consuming is one of the most powerful
financial tools available to anyone today. Why not pick up this tool and use it
for yourself?
Money Saving Tip #3:
Sell all of your junk. That’s right; it’s high past time for a serious yard sale.
Search throughout your house or apartment for every single item that you
don’t really need, and then sell it all! Every last piece!
Take an inventory. The truth is, most people are astounded by what they
own - and how much money they have tied up in items they no longer need
and use. Why let it just sit and collect dust while it could collect interest
instead in a savings account?
You could easily be $600, $1,200 ... even $5,000 richer by the end of the
week. As an added bonus, you’d have your place cleaned up, and you will
have a fresh feeling of beginning all over again. A garage sale is an excellent
way to start. Not only do you clean out your house, but also it often gives a
psychological boost that helps people get control of their life and money.
Money Saving Tip #4:
Ben Franklin said long ago: “A penny saved is a penny earned.” Yes, it’s still
true and still one of the most powerful moneymaking tips in all of history.
Understood well within Franklin’s famous statement is the difficulty of saving.
It’s tough to save and much easier to spend! We all know that! That’s why
every penny saved truly is earned - because it takes so much effort to hold
on to that cash! If you can do it, it will work magic in your life. Having a
savings account will de-stress your life. Imagine being ahead of your bills,
rather than behind. When you are ahead of your bills, you entire life comes
under your own control. You sleep better at night. Your mind is freer to come
up with new ways to make more money and save more. Saving is contagious
- once you let it get started!
Some Tips to help you save:
1.
Don’t settle for interest checking. Have a separate savings account
that can’t be as easily accessed as a checking account.
2.
Keep your savings in a different bank - one that’s off your regular
route, or perhaps even in different town. That way you won’t be tempted to
dip into it every time you visit the bank to make a checking deposit.
29
3.
Buy short-term savings bonds, which have 6-month to one-year
maturity dates. You will get a higher rate, while at the same time keeping
your money close in case of real money emergencies.
4.
If you can, open the account under two, different names and require
that both signatures be required to make a withdrawal. Two people can
debate each withdrawal and keep each other in line.
5.
When you get your paycheck, immediately put a minimum of 5% in
your savings account. After just a year, you’ll be amazed by how much you
have actually saved and you will feel great about it.
Visualize abundance and wealth everyday. Am I actually suggesting that you
practice some sort of mysticism that will make you into a “money magnet”?
Perhaps yes, maybe no. Call it what you wish - a mind game, mysticism,
New Age—the solid fact is that behind every wealthy man and woman is a
positive attitude toward money.
Look at it like this: It costs ZERO one way or the other to have either
negative or positive thoughts. So why not have positive thoughts AND
increase the ODDS?
There have been many studies done on the thought patterns and the mindset of some of the richest, most successful people in the world. The one thing
that they all had in common was a positive attitude toward money and their
ability to earn and keep it.
WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED? RESPECT MONEY AND THINK POSITIVELY
TOWARDS MONEY. THIS IS A GREAT START TO MEANINGFUL SAVINGS.
The key to being able to raise emergency money when needed most is to be
in the right frame of mind about money in the first place. Think positive
about money and spending and save. You can’t beat that equation!
7 Serious Ways to Save Money – Not for the Faint of Heart
Do you truly want to save? Take a serious look at how you spend and then
change it. Quit smoking those cigars, take in a roommate, park your car—
and you’ll save as much as $10,000 a year. It really is just as easy as all
that!
Are you finding it harder and harder to blame savings shortfalls on your
measly pay check?
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Will it surprise you to learn that how much you save has little to do with your
income? Well it is very true, in fact. It has more to do with whether you want
to save and are willing to adjust your finances to boost your savings.
A recent study by Venti’s and Wise, “Choice, Chance and Wealth Dispersion
at Retirement,” found a very wide range in how much people at the same
income levels were able to save for retirement. The study pointed out that it
wasn’t just the higher income folks who managed to save the most. Indeed,
even people in the lowest income groups were able to save more than some
of their middle-income peers—by as much as $100,000.
What was their conclusion? Persons with little savings on the eve of
retirement have simply chosen not to save as much and spend more over
their lifetimes.
The key, then, is simple enough: Spend less than you earn and SAVE MORE.
It is easy to see why some people get into financial trouble.
Some people don’t stop and think that earning money is only one part of the
financial health equation. The other critical part is learning how to manage
money and save.
A big part of the problem for so many is that people just don’t know enough
about their own financial reality. They don’t even know what they earn, they
don’t even know what it takes to live comfortably, and they don’t even know
their true, discretionary income.”
What can be the solution?
People need to educate themselves. Sit down with your monthly bills and
statements and figure out your real income and outgo. Then, decide if you
like what you see. If not, create a realistic plan for changing it.
To help with the process, ask yourself these four essential questions:
What’s my true and current financial picture?
•
•
•
How do I choose to live?
Can my current money support this and how do I really want to use my
money?
How can I best make use of my money?
Treat managing your money as if you would any other household chore and
allot enough time for it each month.
Make note that: Many of the financial tools that have made life more
convenient—such as credit cards—can promote very bad financial habits and
prolong debt when misused. Credit cards should be used ONLY as the cashmanagement tool that they are and not as a borrowing tool.
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Keep in mind that you are spending tomorrow’s money when you put things
on a credit card. You keep locking yourself up and losing your freedom, bit by
bit.
The bottom line on financial health is Stop Spending
More Serious Savings Strategies
If you are serious about having a healthy emergency money fund, you might
want to curb the consumer in you. This means, instead of spending, saving.
Of course, the number one, best way of saving remains to have a portion of
your weekly paycheck automatically deposited to your savings account. If
you like the idea of deciding, week by week, how much savings you will
deposit, take heart and adapt a serious tip or two. It’s all good if the end
result is better and more savings.
Hold that “mother” of all garage sales, once and for all! Do your homework
and literally do a house inventory. Journey back, all the way back, into the
furthest reach of every closet and decide that, if you have not used it for
more than six months, it will have to go. Most people have at least $1,000
worth of garage sale items hidden away in their home. This turns out to be a
veritable gold mine for many.
Just how much do you need that nasty, pack-a-day smoking habit? In
Washington state, that’s easily $5 a day—or about $1,800 a year—that can
go right into your savings. This does not even begin to touch the savings in
insurance and health care.
Tame the driving tiger in you. Instead, carpool or use public transportation.
This will save you on gas, insurance and maintenance costs—not to mention
any money spent on a headache. Using the IRS’s 2002 mileage
reimbursement rate of 36.5 cents per mile as a proxy for the cost of
commuting, you could save $1,141 a year by driving half the time for 50
weeks of the year (based on a 25-mile roundtrip commute). For an even
more serious approach, consider nixing your car if you live in the city. Some
cities are now implementing progressive programs that allow you to have
access to a car without the ownership hassles (e.g. “Flexcar” in Seattle,
Portland and Washington, D.C.)
Buy items used. The average consumer spends about $1,750 a year on
clothing and its upkeep, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’
most recent Consumer Expenditure Survey. You can easily cut that in half by
shopping at consignment shops and auctions, though the life of the goods
may be a bit less than buying new. To account for that, the annual savings
may only amount to 25%, or $437.
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Become a homebody. At just over $1,800 a year on average, entertainment
spending has a way of eating up the best-planned budgets. Consider the
library for books, music and movies. Eat out less often. The average person
spends $2,276 a year on eating out. Try cutting your spending in half on
both areas for annual savings of more than $1,900.
Cut your housing costs. While a move across the tracks may save some
money, moves are expensive. Consider renting out a room in your house.
The average housing costs per person in 2004 were just over $13,200. In
metropolitan areas such as Seattle, rooms easily go for $400 a month. Figure
about $20 of that goes to increases in utility costs, and you’ve still realized
annual savings of more than $4,000 before any income taxes.
Cut up every one of your credit cards. Build an emergency fund first to
handle most unexpected expenses. This allows you to become your own
lending agency. Credit cards can be a cash-flow management tool, but
paying only the minimum will keep you in debt for years.
If you’re the average American with at least one credit card, you probably
have close to $8,523 in credit card debt, according to industry research
group CardWeb.com. At an average APR of 14.4%, it could cost you as much
as $1,100 a year in interest rates alone. By simply waiting until you’ve saved
enough money to make purchases, you could eliminate those interest
payments.
If you’re very ambitious and follow all the above tips, you could be looking at
savings of some $12,000 a year. Figuring you can invest that at the historical
rate of return of 10%, your savings do start to compound nicely—and
rapidly. Instead of the debt, go for the emergency fund and save.
Make Small Cuts for Huge Savings
Tilt the wheel of creating wealth in your favor. Naturally, spending less is one
way. However, to be sure to make your money work harder for you—set
goals to make certain it happens.
Many have wondered what can be the foolproof way of creating wealth. Is it
to buy top paying Internet stocks or to work for a tech startup that offers you
valuable stock options? Is the trick to count every penny or is the road to
wealth paved with risk? Do you have to be especially smart and wellconnected? Alternatively, is becoming wealthy a matter of luck?
The answer is: There is no one, true road to wealth, and all of the above
have created wealth for more than just a few notable individuals.
Nevertheless, you can put the odds of creating wealth on your side by
following a few simple precepts.
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1.
Spend less than what you earn.
This can be the most overlooked scenario, because many people believe it’s a
matter of cutting back on your current standard of living—a strategy that’s
far too difficult for many people. Yes, you can affect your personal balance
sheet by spending less money eating out or on entertaining out. Making a pot
of coffee at the office instead of buying a $3 espresso will make a small
difference in your cash flow. Nevertheless, the biggest difference will be
made on the income side of the ledger.
If you wish to get on the right road to saving, stop looking at your budget as
a pie that must be cut up into various size pieces. Instead, of trying to figure
out how the different pieces will cover your expenses, concentrate on how
you will expand the size of the pie. Yes, you could ask your boss for a raise.
At the same time, figure out how you can begin to earn more money on the
side. Start thinking about how you will sweeten the existing pie.
Think about how you’re spending your time, as well as your money. Perhaps
instead of taking the family out this weekend, you could earn an extra $80
by becoming a waiter or bartender. Instead of taking the kids shopping at
the mall, you could work as a salesclerk earning some extra cash.
If you don’t wish to work every weekend, think about working every other
weekend to start. Instead of paying for a baby sitter while you attend a
concert, take care of a few other children on Saturday or Sunday, freeing
working parents to do their errands. When it comes your weekend to work,
do a switch. This will save you time and money.
Then, instead of spending the extra money you earn from your part-time
work, you can invest it so the money can work for you. When you do this,
you will learn to appreciate your free time that much more.
2.
Make your money work for you.
The ultimate secret to financial success lies in having your money do the
work, so you can relax. This requires accumulating enough investment
dollars so that the growth and earnings can free you from the need to work
even harder. The last thing you will want to be doing is punching a time
clock.
Plenty of very wealthy people continue on working simply because they enjoy
what they’re doing so much. They also redefine work to include managing
their money. For the wealthy, the two can go hand in hand.
Every where you go you will hear, “I never get to the point where I won’t
have to return to work because I can’t afford to set money aside today.
These people overlook the power of compound interest.
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Every worker with earned income is now entitled to open a non-deductible
IRA or, even better, a Roth IRA. The maximum $3,000-a-year contribution
works out to a cost of $57.69 a week. Any hard working American is capable
of achieving this goal.
Moreover, a $3,000 annual investment in a Roth IRA, growing tax-free at the
historical average of 10.6% for the stock market, builds to more than
$500,000 in 30 years. If you start in your twenties and put $3,000 in that
same Roth IRA every year, at 10.6%, you could have a nest egg of nearly,
$5.2 million at age 70, according to the MSN Money’s Savings Calculator.
Even with an 8% annual return, you’ll end up with $1.9 million.
3.
Be sure your money is working for you, instead of against you.
Your money can work very powerfully for you if you make the right decisions
and implement a plan of regular investing. At the same time, wrong money
decisions will place deep potholes on your road to success.
The classic example is credit-card debt. Consider the example of a person
who charges $2,000 on a credit card at 19.8% interest and a $40 annual fee.
If you make only the minimum monthly payments (and many people do just
that), it will take you 31 years and two months to pay off the balance!
Moreover, along the way, you’ll pay an additional $8,202 in finance charges.
This is absurd logic!
What could possibly be so important to charge today that it puts you in debt
for a period far longer than the object is likely to last? (Sure, a mortgage
lasts 30 years, but the interest is deductible and your home should grow in
value over that time.) Most things that you want to charge on your card have
a far shorter life. For many, they can do entirely without that one purchase.
If you’re already in debt, if you would only double the minimum monthly
payment, you could be out of debt in less than three years. Paying down
current debt is the smartest way to start on the road to financial freedom.
4.
Keep a tight clasp on that wallet
When you take a close look at your paycheck, you’ll notice many deductions
before you get to the amount you can cash or put in the bank. Surely, there
are deductions for Social Security, federal, and perhaps state income taxes.
It’s money that’s out of your paycheck before you have a chance to even
make decisions about it. Money set aside for wealth building should be
treated in the exact same way. If your company offers a 401(k) retirement
plan, make sure you sign up for the maximum possible contribution. It will be
taken out of your paycheck, each pay period, automatically. (And if your
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company matches all or part of your contribution, failing to sign up is like
walking away from free money!)
If you didn’t have a chance for automatic deductions to a company savings
plan or even a U.S. Savings Bonds payroll deduction plan, then you’ll have to
create your own automatic savings plan. Ask if your company will deposit
your paycheck directly into your bank account—or promise yourself to do it
the day you receive the check.
Then sign up for an automatic monthly deduction plan with a mutual fund
company to create regular deposits into an IRA. You can even set up an
automatic deduction for U.S. Savings bonds at its Web site. The whole point
to this is to get the money out of your checking account as quickly as
possible, before you see it and spend it.
5.
Create money savings and investment goals.
Would you like to have $1 million by the age of 40 or 50 or by the time you
retire? Sure you would!
Begin by setting your own goals. Never set a goal you can’t control. Your
targets can’t depend on your boss giving you a raise; they must be reachable
by your own efforts. You might need to invest in yourself by acquiring more
education or training so you can qualify for a job that pays more.
You might need to take more risk in your investments or in your lifestyle by
taking on a second job that pays commissions instead of a fixed salary.
Evaluate the risks involved, and understand that by putting the odds on your
side, you can get a larger return.
Emergency Money Strategy while Dealing With Debt, Financial Stress
& Family
Financial stress is common among those forced into frugality because of a
lost job, divorce, death in the family, or being overcome with debt, etc. This
can cause a person to feel insecure, fearful, anxious, angry, and, of course,
depressed.
These same feelings are easily the number one cause of poor money
management decisions. These poor decisions will lead to unmanageable debt
loads, and start a vicious cycle of panic that never seems to end.
When you reach this point, and you find yourself with a money emergency,
your feelings of helplessness can become so overwhelming you literally stop
functioning in the real world.
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YOU NEED TO HAVE YOUR WITS ABOUT YOU TO RAISE EMERGENCY MONEY
Get yourself Immediate Help
If you recognize any of the above traits in yourself, get the help you need
right away. See out a professional counselor ... talk to a friend or family
member … but talk to someone! If you know someone who is exhibiting the
above traits, offer to help them! It doesn’t matter whether you lend then
cash, an ear, offer some helpful advice, or help them get counseling, do
something!
The first thing that you need to grasp is that no situation is hopeless. With
just a little guidance and patience, along with a couple of well thought out
goals, and emotional support from family and friends, you can do what it
takes to come out of dire circumstances.
You can adapt a new outlook, new skills, and best of all, a new feeling of
self-esteem. Don’t allow anyone to tell you different, and if they do, close the
same door that they came into and don’t again open it! What you need is
positive reinforcement and not negativity to help you get to the other side.
Seek out your True Friends
When you are desperate to raise emergency funds, it usually doesn’t take
very long for you to realize who really cares about you, who is truly a friend
... be they family or not. Your friends will be there for you in your time of
need, offer encouragement, and lend an ear so you can just talk. Ask for help
in coming up with good ideas about how you can raise emergency funds
during such a difficult time in your life. Be open to the many suggestions that
you will receive.
Prepare to Set your Priorities
There comes the time when you will need to put aside your feelings and just
concentrate on the well being of you, and your family. This has to be your
priority during times of financial stress and upheaval. In financially stressful
times, if you, as the Mom or Dad, can’t cope, how can you expect your
children to cope now, or in the future? You must set the example for the rest
of the family to draw strength from them.
So make the decision today to learn how to cope, to make the changes you
can, to stay focused and goal-oriented, and to let anxiety and financial stress
go out the door so that you will be prepared to deal with any money
emergencies that come your way.
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You need to be able to come up with some quick cash fixes (without
additional borrowing) to recover from a Money Emergency:
Budgeting Tip #1: The first thing you want to do is prioritize to get back on
track very quickly. If that means letting your credit card bill go for a bit, so
be it. As soon as you realize that you have a money emergency, contact your
credit card issuers and request reduced interest rates and payments. Not
only one, both!
Budgeting Tip #2: For your car payment, call the creditor and request a
payment extension. Perhaps you hate payment extensions, because they
require a fee and you still have to make the payment at the end of the
contract. In this case, a payment extension can allow a little breathing room
to help you recover during your money emergency. Expect that you will likely
have to pay a fee (usually about ¼ - 1/3 the car payment amount) for the
extension. Freeing up the money you need today is your first and only goal
at this point.
Budgeting Tip #3: Check to see if your mortgage holder will allow an
extension for a nominal fee. Do this today!
Budgeting Tip #4: Another quick fix, is to host an on the spot yard sale. You
don’t have too much time for planning, so do a quick survey of your personal
belongings. Come up with clothes that no longer fit, but that are in good
condition, knick-knacks, dishes, and books as well as stuff you bought but no
longer use. Throw it all together, quickly. Put some notices up the same day
at laundry mats and grocery stores around town, and remember to place a
sign at the end of your driveway. You can make a quick $300 this way with
very little time and effort.
Budgeting Tip #5: If you have a larger item to sell, call into the local radio
stations to see if they have a “call in swap show” on the weekends. This is a
very popular way to quickly convert gently used and more expensive items to
fast cash.
Budgeting Tip #6: Another quick option is with utility and telephone bills. If
you aren’t already on a budget plan, ask that the current bill (plus any
previous balance you owe) be set up for a budget plan. Expect to pay a down
payment (usually ¼ of the bill) and that all future bills (while on the back
payment budget plan) must be kept current. The nice thing about it ... it’s
usually interest free, and can give you some much-needed breathing space
for a month. You must be sure though that you maintain the regular utility
payments AND the budget payments in the coming month.
Budgeting Tip #7: Check with your family church regarding emergency help.
Local churches can be one of the best places to find out what’s available in
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the community to help those in need, or in times of emergency. Check with
your local church, first.
Getting Fast Cash through Borrowing
If you are absolutely, positively, in a bind, a real cash emergency, and you
have exhausted all of the above, then consider borrowing. First, ask your
family, then your local bank.
As a last resort, you may want to consider what’s known as a “Payday Loan.”
These types of borrowing stores can be useful when all else fails.
A Few Timely Lessons in Simple Living
Planning for a money emergency takes plenty of forethought. It is best to
start to plan now rather than need to scramble to come up with the cash
when the need is greatest.
•
Adapt some strategic thinking.
•
Reprogram your mind now to become a saver
•
Simple living yields simply millions in savings
•
Remind yourself that you can do with less
•
Make a mindful decision to live light.
•
Put your entire family on a budget
•
Discuss strategies about how to build your first budget
Better Money Management Thinking
The first step to making better choices when it comes to how we spend our
money or time is living and acting consciously and examining daily money
and work habits.
Simple living is largely a matter of making better choices in life: about how
we spend, consume, create community and spend our free time.
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It is NOT to just consume less. It is to consume smarter OR differently.
We must NOT just go blindly along when it comes to consumption.
Just say no to impulse buying
•
If you see something you want, put it aside and think about it for at least
a couple of days. Chances are, the impulse should pass.
•
Look to other sources of entertainment
•
Find ways to socialize and create your own entertainment that don’t
revolve around expensive restaurant tabs or event tickets.
•
Spend time in quiet time
•
Quiet time helps you recharge your spiritual batteries and give you the
time you need to reflect on life and make better choices.
•
Remember that time is money after all
•
This time issue is going to loom even larger than money. We, as a
society, have concluded that time is money. The two are closely tied.
Spend time wisely.
Every Day Money Saving Tips
How to Save Money on Gas
Gas prices just keep going up, and our wallets keep decreasing in size. This
how-to will teach you many ways to save money at the local gas station.
Steps
1.
Take out a credit card. Some credit cards offer gas savings when you
use the card for purchases. This works in much the same way that some
credit card companies give you frequent flyer miles when you use their card
for purchases.
2.
Get a gas membership card. Look for membership benefits. In
addition, department and grocery stores give discounts at the fuel pump
when you use their store membership cards. Shopping at Giant Eagle grocery
store and using their membership card, it’s possible (at the time of this
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writing) to fill a car’s tank for .79 cents a gallon, with savings of $1.36 per
gallon.
3.
Give your car a good tune up. While giving your car a tune up won’t
actually save you money at the pump, it will save you in gas. Using less gas
saves you money over all. Have the oil changed, and have a certified
mechanic give your engine a twice over.
4.
Check the WWW for deals. Web sites let you find the best deals in your
area.
5.
Buy a hybrid car. Not only do hybrid cars give you immediate savings
at the pump, the U.S. government and your local state offer tax breaks for
people that use gas saving cars. Federal deductions for using gas saving cars
can be as high as $2000. If you can’t afford the growing number of hybrid
cars out there, consider getting a regular car with good MPG (miles per
gallon), like the Toyota Echo.
6.
Turn off the AC. Running the car’s air conditioning puts extra strain on
your car’s engine. This translates into you car eating up more gas per mile.
Use less gas, save money. Depending on the car you drive, at highway
speeds, the AC might put less drag on your car than if all the windows are
open. Therefore, you might want to keep it cool on the highway.
7.
Use the cheaper stuff. Most modern cars run just as well with the
cheap gas as they do with the more expensive gas. In fact, engineers
assume the car buyer is going to use the cheap gas, and so, they design the
car’s engine accordingly.
8.
Don’t fill the tank when prices are higher. Gas suppliers and gas
station owners can charge high prices for gas because they know people will
pay for it. The owners monitor how much gas people are putting into their
cars each day. If they hike up the price a few cents and people are still filling
up their tanks, this tells the owners that people are willing to pay the high
price. Adding only a few gallons to your car when prices are high sends a
message to the owners that people are not happy about the high prices.
9.
Don’t drive. Don’t drive when you don’t absolutely have to. Carpooling,
walking, taking the bus, and riding a bike not only saves you gas, but these
are better for the environment and may be better for your health. Do you
really need to drive to the store when it is only a couple of blocks down the
street?
10.
Check the tire air pressures weekly. Buy an inexpensive manual air
pump and an accurate tire gauge (not a pencil gauge as they are not
accurate). Keep all tires inflated to the same pressure as recommended for
your car but not for your tire. Go by the sticker on the doorframe and not the
tire wall.
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11.
Drive at a consistent speed and keep the windows up tight. Keeping
the windows closed reduces the drag on your car. Sticking to the speed limit
also helps. So, will using less gear changes and revving the engine less.
Avoid accelerating fast or braking suddenly. Use cruise control when you can.
12.
Clean out any unnecessary items in your car. If you have heavy
objects in your car that you don’t need - remove them. If your car is lighter,
it will use less fuel to get you to where you’re going.
13.
Avoid leaving your car idle. If you are going to be stopped for more
than one minute, you will save gas by turning the car off and restarting when
you are ready to go.
14.
Buy on cold days. Buy fuel on cold days and if you can, drive on the
hot days. When you buy on cold days, and pay for volume, you buy more
“mass” of fuel for the same price. Never fill the tank completely or it will
overflow when it becomes hotter.
Simpler Solutions for Managing your Money
Let’s face it, coming up with smart and simple ways of saving money takes
thinking that is a bit more creative.
Use some of these shortcuts to managing your finances. They are guaranteed
to save you time and money.
Trick your mind into saving
Can’t always come up with where your money goes? There is a simple
solution: Trick your own mind into spending less and saving more.
If you are up for a challenge, allocate yourself a weekly allowance. Put a set
amount of allowance into an envelope and determine that this will be all you
will be allowed to spend for any given week. Next, divide your allowance to
take care of your expenses. When you get down to the last $20, that’s the
amount you put into your emergency fund. When the money is gone, there
will be no more until next week.
Each payday, allocate a percentage to go into a secret fund used only for
emergencies. When it’s crunch time, you will know it’s there.
Establish one dresser drawer just to toss single dollar bills. This way when
the pizza man arrives, you will have the singles handy and won’t need to
break the larger dollar amounts. This discipline forces your mind to think
larger amounts and to save larger amounts. You get into the habit of
spending only the singles. This works!
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To control your credit card debt, carry just one card and pay it off each
month. If you are tempted to over spend, the credit card goes into the safe
where you only stash your emergency fund. When crunch day comes you
have a credit card you can use that will always be in good standing.
Jot down expenses in a notebook and tally them at the end of each week to
see if you are over or under your budget estimates. Build in more than you
need so that you will always have a cushion in case of a cash emergency.
Tracking your spending takes some work but if you take careful notes, you
will always be able to see one or two areas where you’re leaking cash. You
can then come up with an extra $20 or more per week in savings. That’s
$1,000 a year in real money for an emergency fund.
More tricks to add to your own savings routine:
Have your paycheck automatically deposited directly to savings rather than
to your checking account. You will transfer money to pay your bills, but you’ll
think twice about withdrawing additional cash.
Make ONLY one ATM withdrawal each week.
Subtract your credit card purchases immediately from your checking account
so you’re not surprised once the bill arrives.
When you pay off a loan, add the amount to payments you’re already making
to the next lender on your list. You can also send the money to a saving or
investment account earmarked for a house, a vacation or a new car and this
money will be made available in case of a money emergency.
PAY YOUR BILLS ONLINE AND SAVE
Nearly one-third of U.S. consumers pay their bills online, says Judy Wicks of
CheckFree, the leading provider of electronic-billing and payment services.
Probably the easiest way to pay your bills online is to use a safe, encrypted
service—offered by banks, credit unions, brokers and companies such as
AOL, MSN, Quicken or Yahoo! Arrange for an e-mail reminder that a bill is
due.
The service can handle payments entirely electronically or it can generate a
paper check, if necessary—to pay the guy who mows your lawn, for example.
If a payment is late, many bill-paying services will reimburse you for late
fees up to a certain amount (sometimes as much as $50), as long as you
have scheduled the payment within their guidelines.
To shed yet more paperwork, arrange to receive bills and statements
electronically. Sign up with e-billers on many services or at
MyCheckFree.com.
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Online bill paying also helps you to keep your finances organized. You have
your records right there—what you owe, past payments—and all on one site.
Wells Fargo goes a step further: Its online-banking customers have access to
My Spending Report, which they can use as a de facto budget. My Spending
Report tracks online bill payments and Wells Fargo debit- and credit-card
charges, and plugs them into one of 20 categories so that you can see how
much you’ve spent on, say, movies and restaurant meals.
In addition, of course, you can track your spending using Microsoft Money or
Quicken. With Quicken 2006, once you pay a bill there’s no need to print and
file it. Instead, you can attach the bill electronically to the account from
which you made your payment, so it’s always at your fingertips.
REWARD YOURSELF
Are you trying to figure out which credit card offers the best rebate? Simple
solution: Take the cash and run.
It couldn’t be easier than this. With a cash rebate, you get either a check in
the mail or a credit on your statement, so you don’t have to weigh the
relative benefits of airline miles versus a new set of luggage. To find the best
deals, we simplified the process by assuming that you spend $33 on gas each
week, $100 a week on groceries and $1,000 per month on other purchases.
Tops is the Citi Dividend Platinum Select card (at www.citibank.com). It
charges 11.74% and offers rebates of 5% on purchases at supermarkets,
drugstores and gas stations and 1% on everything else. However, Citi caps
its annual rebate at $300, which you would reach in about eight months
under our scenario (at that point you could switch to another card). Exempt
from the cap are goods bought through Citi’s Dividend Merchant Network,
which includes more than 200 retailers, catalogs and Internet sites. Those
purchases earn rebates between 5% and 7%.
Next up is the National City Everyday Rewards Elite Visa card (at
www.nationalcity.com), on which our yearlong spending spree would earn
a rebate of $270. National City is unique in bundling restaurants with grocery
stores in a single category, with rebates of 2%. With an interest rate of
10.49%, the card rebates 4% on gas, 3% on movies and up to 1% on
everything else. There are spending caps in some categories.
The American Express Blue Cash card (at www.americanexpress.com)
carries an interest rate of 11.24%. It gives you up to 5% on groceries, gas
and drugstore purchases, and up to 1.5% on the rest of your charges, up to
a maximum expenditure of $50,000. Total rebate in our example: $266.
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The Capital One No Hassle Cash card (at www.capitalone.com) offers a
rebate of up to 3% on gas and groceries and 1% on everything else you buy,
with no dollar limit and a relatively modest 9.9% interest rate. You would
earn an annual reward of $237 in our scenario.
The Chase Free Cash Rewards Platinum Visa card (at www.bankone.com),
which carries an interest rate of 11.99%, gives you one point for every dollar
spent on purchases (with a $60,000 spending cap). In addition, it has an
interesting twist: a one-point bonus for every dollar you pay in interest. Each
time you accrue 2,500 points, you receive a check for $25. Without the
interest bonus, you’d be eligible for a rebate of $189, so the card is more
attractive for card users who often carry a balance.
When saving for an emergency fund – you just can’t go wrong with cash!
Multiple Ways to make the most of a Year-end Bonus
If you have a nice chunk of extra cash to look forward to each year, think
now about the best ways to put it to work for you.
Maybe this year you’ll get lucky. You’ve applied for that great, higher-paying
promotion and this will boost your monthly pay by $500. You want to make
sure the money goes toward building a better future rather than being
squandered on items, you just don’t need.
That’s the beauty of getting a year-end raise or bonus—it’s one of the rare
opportunities to make a big difference in your finances without having to
make sacrifices. You’ve been living without the money previously, so you can
take any financial medicine you need even without altering your present
lifestyle.
Financial triage
Consider first that all extra cash should first be used to solidify your base.
Next, pay off all credit-card debt.
This can have a gigantic ripple effect on the rest of your finances. As soon as
you stop paying higher interest charges each month, you’ll have more money
to devote to any other goals.
Pad your emergency fund, if you don’t already have three to six months’
worth of living expenses in a safe and liquid account. That way you won’t
have to go into debt or raid long-term savings for unexpected bills when the
bigger emergencies do arrive.
Add contributions to your 401(k), if you haven’t hit the limit. You’ll avoid
paying more taxes on the extra cash, and you may earn free money if you
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get an employer match. You can also invest part of your bonus in your IRA if
you haven’t contributed $3,000 for 2004 ($3,500 if you’re 50 or older). If
you’ve already reached that limit, use your bonus to make your 2005 IRA
contribution in January (the limit rises to $4,000 next year, $4,500 if you’re
50 or older) or earmark a bigger chunk of your raise each month.
Take a look at that long-term debt
Now that you have boosted your financial foundation, you have more
flexibility. Watson is already in great shape—she’s maxing out her 401(k)
and Roth IRA contributions—but she still has about $17,000 in student loans
hanging over her head. The loans carry a low, 3.5% rate, so she’s trying to
choose between adding the $500 a month to her loan payments or investing
the extra money.
With interest rates that low, paying off the loan doesn’t need to be a priority.
“If you can earn at least 3.5% in the marketplace, and I believe that you
can, then investing is the better way to go,” says Brian Jones, a certified
financial planner in Fairfax, Va. Investing becomes even more important if
you need to save for a short-term goal, such as buying a house.
However, it’s okay if you’d rather pay off a student loan to get it out of the
way. “Psychologically, it’s important to get these debts behind you before
you start to move ahead,” says Mari Adam, a certified financial planner in
Boca Raton, Fla. “I know people in their 30’s who still have big loans, and
that debt becomes like a ball and chain around their leg.”
The same is true if you’re thinking of devoting part of your raise to making
extra mortgage payments. Chris Crocket, a doctor in Tupelo, Miss., is getting
a big bonus this year that could be enough to pay off his mortgage that has
10 years remaining at 4.75%. As long as he’s covered his other bases,
paying off the loan could give him the equivalent of a guaranteed 4.75%
return.
Eliminating your mortgage payment can also help if you’ll be retiring soon or
worry that you may lose your job, says Evelyn D’Amico, a financial planner in
Paoli, Pa. However, you don’t want to tie up too much money in a single
investment. For better diversification, you could devote part of your raise or
bonus to your mortgage and then invest the rest.
Don’t forget to treat yourself
It is time to have some fun and you deserve it! You worked hard for your
bonus or raise, so, go out there and have some fun.
You can set up a vacation fund.
Use part of your extra cash today to pay for the trip you have always
wanted. You only need to set aside $310 per month in a savings account
paying 2% to end up with $5,000 for springtime in Italy in 2006. Imagine
spending the spring in Italy! Now that would be some kind of vacation.
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Spend some money on your home.
Many home improvements can save you big money over the long haul. For
example, think about the value of storm-resistant windows and shutters.
Spending an extra few thousand dollars now, not only helps protects your
home, but also can increase its value and lower the premiums on your
homeowner’s policy. This is smart planning!
One final idea is to start up a charitable fund. With $10,000, you can set up a
donor-advised fund at many mutual fund companies and brokerage firms.
You can then deduct the contributions on your tax return straight away and
decide later which charities that you wish to support.
A Few Useful Savings Strategies
1.
Don’t pay a dime for anything that you can make or fix for yourself.
2.
Prolong the life of whatever you own.
3.
Use less of what you need.
4.
Think creatively. The answer doesn’t have to be “buy a new one.”
5.
Don’t toss anything if it can be reused or recycled somehow.
You could do these tried-and-true, pioneer values now.
If you really want to save money, you can’t just look at ways to save now.
You have to look at your life, today.
Simple Ways to Bring both Calm AND Savings into your Life
Saving is far more than just an action – it is a way of living, day-by-day.
Start to be calm by first slowing. Whatever it is that you are working on now,
stop. Spend the next 30 minutes a day in silence and solitude. You need to
teach your mind how to relax, so you can shift from the work-and-spend
treadmill and then focus on what’s most important to you.
A calm heart is a tidy heart. It is time to clean up your act. Start today by
spending 15 minutes every day going through a closet, a shelf, a drawer, and
getting rid of anything you don’t use or cherish. Once you start on these
surface areas, weeding that out, the skills and mindset carry over to more
complex areas like your work, money and relationships.
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It is now time to learn what is enough. Being calm and saving is really about
transforming your life in a conscious and deliberate manner. It is determining
what is enough in your life, so that you can do more with even less.
Finally, seek out some good support—whether you’re trying to save money
or simplify your life.
Don’t go this alone. With Americans $2 trillion deep in debt, you’re certainly
not alone in your desire to save money. Find a friend who can help you to get
started and then get busy. You will be glad that you did.
Slash your electric bill in 6 easy steps
Spending lots to save pennies makes very little sense, but if you’re already in
the market for a new appliance, consider the Web as your first line of
defense in energy-savings.
Perhaps you weren’t so Eco-conscious until that glaring electric bill landed in
your mailbox. It’s time to become mindful of the green in your wallet and
save energy at the same time.
Start by simply unplugging unused appliances, lowering the temperature on
your electric water heater to 120 degrees F, and washing only full loads of
dishes and air drying them.
At the same time take a look at the free online calculators to get customized
tips for improving your home’s energy efficiency at Home Energy Saver, a
Web site sponsored by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and
the Department of Energy (DOE).
Spending hundreds to save pennies generally doesn’t make sense, but if
you’re already in the market for a new appliance, or even light bulbs,
consider the Web your first energy-savings tool.
Think Climate Control
A typical household uses the bulk of its energy for heating and cooling—up to
44% of your utility bill, according to the DOE’s Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy Network (EREN).
Install a programmable thermostat. This can reduce energy wasted while
heating or cooling a house when no one is home or everyone’s asleep.
According to the Home Energy Saver site, Energy Star programmable
thermostats can save as much as 20% to 30% on your heating or cooling
costs by allowing for multiple daily settings and automatically adjusting when
the outside temperature changes. Participating manufacturers include
Honeywell, Hunter Fan and Smart Systems International. Unfortunately, it’s
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not easy to search for programmable thermostats by Energy Star status.
Instead, keep an eye out for those with features typical of the Energy Star
thermostats: temperature recovery systems, two programs and four
temperature settings.
Think Ceiling fans
When you move the air, you tend to feel cooler. This allows for higher
summertime thermostat settings. According to EREN, the effect is equivalent
to lowering the air temperature by about 4° F (2° C), and using less energy
than air conditioners in doing so.
Think Lighting, Cooking and other Appliances
The next-biggest household energy use after climate control is for lighting,
cooking and other appliances. Not counting the fridge, these make up about
33% of a typical utility bill.
Think Compact Fluorescent Lamps (CFL’s)
CFL’s will use up to 75% less energy than standard incandescent bulbs and
will last up to 10 times longer, according to Home Energy Saver. This is very
good, because they’re also more expensive to start with.
Check your local utility for ideas. Look for a free “Conservation Kit”,
containing among other things, two CFL’s. This, of course, is a terrific deal!
Think Energy-efficient Appliances
Use the Energy Star site as a starting point to search for Maytag washing
machines. Look for the Atlantis MAV9600 high-efficiency model for $689 at
Best Maytag.
Among household appliances, the refrigerator is likely your biggest energy
consumer, especially if it’s more than 15 years old. It can account for up to
9% of your energy costs alone. Again, look to the Energy Star site for a list
of energy-efficient models if you’re looking to replace yours.
Hot Water Heating
Heating water is the third-biggest home-energy cost and typically accounts
for 14%-20% of your total energy bill.
Think Hot Water Jackets
Hot water jackets usually sell for $10 to $20, and shipping charges for buying
them online can easily increase their cost by 50% or more. Use the Web to
find offline deals in this case.
Think Aerating, Low-flow Faucets and Showerheads
Both Niagara and AM Conservation models popped up on a variety of
environmental sites, including EnergyGuide, which also had the best price for
the four-way adjustable Niagara showerhead at $6.75. The nice thing about
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ordering from EnergyGuide is that it automatically searches for any rebates
based on the ZIP code you enter.
When you’re considering buying a new home, you can plan for energy
savings from the ground up with an energy-efficient homebuilding project.
Check the DOE’s Building America and the EPA sites to find projects near
you.
GOOD WAYS TO FIND FREE MONEY
If you are tired of making lifestyle changes to accommodate your savings
plans then read on. These ideas lead you to prime places to look for money
that’s already rightfully yours.
Some people see little point in changing their ways to save a quick $5 or
$10. These same people find it difficult to believe such small amounts can
actually make a significant difference to their bottom line. They’d much
rather indulge in a little daily luxury, like enjoying a cup of espresso each
day, then tighten their belts for what they see as measly savings.
For all the spendthrifts at heart, here are some concrete ways to save on
things you are already paying for. No need to change your lifestyle or habits
in the least. Think of it as money that you are already overpaying to others.
Step up to the plate and claim your free money!
Talking on your cell-phone
You thought you were going to need 2,000 minutes a month, only to find 300
or even 200 would do just as well.
If you’re coming to the end of your contract, or if your service provider is
willing to waive the early-termination fee, ask to have your deal changed as
soon as possible.
Think about this: Verizon’s America’s Choice 3,200-minute plan runs about
$200 per month; you’ll spend just $40 for its 400-minute America’s Choice
plan. This is provided you don’t start going over on your minutes and
incurring pricey overage charges, that’s $160 in savings each month, or
$1,920 a year. Even changing from the America’s Choice 1,100-minute plan
at $80, would still cut your telephone bill in half for an added $480 in your
pocket.
Local and long-distance calling: If you’re not using all of your cell-phone
minutes each month on a plan that doesn’t allow you to just roll them over,
you can at least offset your landline costs with those otherwise-wasted
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minutes. Are you already doing this? Try bundling your local and longdistance plans if you’re regularly spending more than $50 per month. Many
bundled plans start at just $50 before taxes and fees and allow you to talk
for as long as you want without the huge bills.
Calculate all of the above carefully, though. If your usage is not steady, you’ll
pay the same rate every month, meaning no breaks for vacations when your
usage normally decreases.
Your checking account: When was the last time you looked at the monthly
fees your bank assesses on your checking account? By switching to a noninterest-bearing account, you can pay far less money and avoid higher fees.
Bankrate.com’s annual survey of checking accounts found that average
monthly fees are up to $10.86 on interest-bearing accounts, vs. $3.72 for
regular checking accounts. You’ll have to keep $2,258 socked away in that
interest-bearing account to avoid fees versus the $245 minimum for the noninterest account. So, what are you giving up?
Average yields sat at a paltry 0.27% in the fall of 2003, the time of the
Bankrate report. Meantime, if you can, try to plan your ATM withdrawals. The
average fee you’ll pay for using another bank’s ATM machine is $2.69 -$1.40 to the ATM’s bank and $1.29 to your own. Eliminating only one of
these withdrawals each week can save you a nice $140 per year.
Your insurance: You can save on your insurance policies in a variety of ways.
Ask your insurance provider outright for discounts: Besides the usual good
student and safety discounts on auto policies, ask for a multi-policy discounts
if you’re insuring more than one vehicle. Raise your deductibles on older cars
or drop collision coverage altogether if your car is worth less than $1,000.
Raising your deductible from $200 to $500 can reduce your premium by as
much as 30%, according to Insure.com.
NEVER overpay to borrow your credit cards. Do you think that 2% or 3%
isn’t worth fighting for on your credit card’s APR? Consider this: If you’re an
average American, you owe $8,940 in household credit card debt, according
to CardWeb.com’s CardData Service. At the average APR of 16.44%, you’ll
pay $1,470 per year just in interest alone.
For every 1% decrease in APR, you will save $89. However, the difference is
far more dramatic over the entire life of your debt. Figuring you can make
monthly payments of 5% of your debt per month, you’ll pay $3,334 in total
interest at the higher rate. However, at an APR of 13.44%, you’ll have paid
$2,551 – that is 23% less.
Also, lots of cards come with added benefits, such as airline miles or, better
yet, even cash back. American Express’ Blue Cash card rewards you with up
to 5% cash back; the GM card awards 5% back toward a GM new car
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purchase or lease. On the average credit card debt of $8,940, that works out
to $447. Use MSN Money’s Credit Card Analyzer to find other low-rate and
cash-back cards. In addition, you can check CardWeb for a list of the
monthly rewards that credit cards are offering.
Your mortgage. Your biggest savings potential here is to get rid of PMI, or
private mortgage insurance. PMI protects the lender should you default on
your loan. You’re obligated to pay this so long as your equity remains below
20%, but once you cross that magic threshold, you should ask your lender to
drop the fee.
The law actually says your lender must drop the fee once your equity crosses
22%, provided you have a conventional loan originated or refinanced after
July 29, 1999 and you have a good payment history. However, if you have
an older loan, you could be paying this unnecessarily without realizing it.
Depending on the size of your mortgage, this could be adding hundreds of
dollars to your mortgage cost annually. Look into this, today.
Make the most of your current resources
Begin by using what you have. Paying for Internet access already? E-mail
can be a great way to cut your long-distance telephone costs. It may not be
a substitute for your weekly heart-to-hearts with Dad, but it probably should
substitute for the “when can we get together again?” calls. Why spend
precious money leaving voice mail?
Take the time to get rid of what you don’t use. If you’re not using it, you
won’t miss it when it’s gone. Donate all unwanted items for a tax deduction,
have a garage sale or sell them on eBay. If you have to come up with money
for a storage unit for all that stuff, it’s time to eliminate that debt.
Pay attention to potential income
Perhaps you have had a hobby for years but have never considered it as a
money earner. Take a good look at it now. If you love to scrapbook, consider
putting an ad in the paper to teach others how to do the same. At the same
time, establish a Web page where others can sign up to learn your craft
online.
Could you have old money just waiting to be claimed? Perhaps, you made a
move and forgot about an old bank account. There are plenty of free sites
that list people who are owed money by insurance companies, banks and
utilities. Try MissingMoney and CashUnclaimed.
Ask for a deal
It’s that time again when you need to go out and buy a big-ticket item. You
know by now to shop around for the best price but are you prepared to ask
for a deal. Next time you have your heart set on that ruby ring and you are
prepared to drop 3K to make the purchase, stop and think about haggling
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that price a bit. Don’t just assume because you are at a finer jewelry store
that the price will be carved in stone. Ask. It never hurts to ask.
Using Good Commonsense and Planning – You Can Survive!!
Armed with the finances that you need to survive, look to the below lists and
arm yourself, now, with all of the supplies that you will need in a dire
emergency:
Miscellaneous supplies to store up
· 25 pounds laundry soap
· 12 28 oz. bottles dish soap
· 73 rolls toilet paper
· sanitary napkins in sufficient quantity
· 8 gallons bleach (used for sanitation as well as laundry)
· 12 bars hand soap
· 6 24 oz. bottles shampoo
· personal products, such as toothpaste, deodorant
· chainsaw oil and other items to keep things running
· pet foods
· livestock feed
· 55 gallons kerosene for lighting
· 25 gallons Coleman fuel or other lantern fuel
Suggested contents of a good medical kit
A good first aid book
Thermometer
Daily prescription meds for all family
Antibiotics
Ointments for the eye, fungus & cuts
Antidiarhea medication
Pain and anti-inflammatory medication
such as aspirin
Burn treatment, such as Burn Free
Iodine/Betadine
Alcohol
Oral electrolytes (for dehydration from
fever, diarrhea, stress)
Cold remedies
Cough medicines
Cough drops/throat discs
Bandages
Gauze
Cotton
Surgical tape
Scissors
Hemostats
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Tweezers
Needles to remove slivers
A dental kit to patch dentures,
replace fillings, etc.)
Checklist for stay-at-home emergencies
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Food and water for family, pets & livestock for at least 14 days; 55
gallons of fresh water will last a family of four for over seven days.
Daily medications for family for 14 days
Alternative heat source & fuel
Alternative cooking source & fuel
Alternative lighting source & fuel
Flashlights & batteries
Transistor, crank or solar radio
Medical kit
Matches
Butane lighters
Magnesium, flint & steel fire starter
Checklist for vehicle emergency preparedness
Jack & lug wrench
Spare tire
Shovel
Battery jumper cables
Basic tool kit
Fix-A-Flat
Oil
Lighter air pump
Gallon of drinking water
Blankets
Basic first aid kit
Flashlight
Emergency food
Candles with matches
Map
Cell phone or C.B. can
be a life saver
Evacuation Needs
Storage food in large cooler #1
Instant potatoes
Dry milk
Canned tuna
Dehydrated eggs
Dry noodles
Flour
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Shortening
TVPs
Dry soup mixes
MREs (military instant Rice
meals; meals ready to eat)
Dry beans
Margarine powder
Dehydrated fruit
Dehydrated vegetables
Tomato powder
Baking powder
Salt
Spices & condiments
Pudding mixes
Cornmeal
Instant coffee, tea, drink mixes
Sugar
Large cooler #2
Frying pan
Large pot
Smaller pot
Mixing bowl, steel (can double as cooking utensil)
Matches & lighters
Toilet paper
Paper towels
Dish towel
Dish soap
Candles
Dish scrubber pad
Bowls for family
Silverware for family
Metal spatula
Roll of duct tape
Small roll of wire
Metal cups for family
Small water filter
Propane stove & tanks
Flashlight & batteries
Hatchet
Sleeping Gear (in large plastic box) Sleeping bags
Candles & lighters
Coleman lantern
Unopened gallon of lantern fuel
Bow saw
Warm socks & jackets
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10’ x 12’ plastic tarp
lightweight tent
Radio
Rifle/shotgun and ammunition (food procurement, signaling, and family
protection)
Personal backpacks
Warm clothes
Emergency food
Socks
Stocking hat
Basic fishing gear without rod
Small first aid kit
Space blanket
Flashlight
Roll of wire & rope
Pocket knife
Canteen with cup
Lighter
A few dollars in quarters & bills
IN CASE OF EMERGENCY – BE PREPARED!!
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